Fiscal Reform for Inclusive Growth in PRC Juzhong Zhuang Economics and Research Department Asian Development Bank Presentation at the International Seminar.

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Presentation on theme: "Fiscal Reform for Inclusive Growth in PRC Juzhong Zhuang Economics and Research Department Asian Development Bank Presentation at the International Seminar."— Presentation transcript:

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Fiscal Reform for Inclusive Growth in PRC Juzhong Zhuang Economics and Research Department Asian Development Bank Presentation at the International Seminar on Fiscal and Tax Policy Reform May 21, 2013, Shanghai Disclaimer: The views expressed in this document are those of the author, and do not necessarily reflect the views and policies of the Asian Development Bank (ADB), its Board of Directors, or the governments they represent. ADB does not guarantee the accuracy of the data included in this document, and accept no responsibility for any consequence of their use. By making any designation or reference to a particular territory or geographical area, or by using the term “country” in this document, ADB does not intend to make any judgments as to the legal or other status of any territory or area.

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I. Inequality in PRC According to the National Statistical Bureau, PRC’s Gini coefficient of per capita household income stood at 47.4 in 2012, among the highest in Asia. Many Asian countries experienced rising inequality in recent decades, but PRC’s increase was among the most pronounced.

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I. Inequality in PRC Regional inequality increased until 2003 and since then it has been on the decline, while the urban-rural income gap has continued to rise. Spatial inequality—urban/rural and regional disparity combined— accounts for more than 50% of the total inequality in PRC; compared with 30% in India and 20% in the Philippines.

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Falling share of labor income—which is more unequal—contributed to rising inequality. I. Inequality in PRC So did the rising skill premium; education inequality accounts for more than 25% of total inequality in 2007, compared with 8% in 1995.

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I. Inequality in PRC A recent ADB study highlights three drivers of rising inequality in Asia: technological change, globalization, market oriented reform:  Working through a falling share of labor income, rising skill premiums, and increasing spatial inequality;  Impacts of these have been compounded by unequal access to opportunity. This analysis is very much applicable to PRC. The ADB study calls for:  Efficient fiscal measures to reduce inequality in human capital;  Interventions to reduce regional inequality;  Growth that is more employment friendly to increase demand for labor ;  More broadly, moving towards inclusive growth.

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II. Inclusive growth and fiscal policy Inclusive growth means everyone can participate in and benefit from growth process on an equitable basis. Inclusive growth makes a distinction between  Inequality due to differences in individual efforts, and  Inequality due to differences in individual circumstance, or inequality in opportunity. Reducing or eliminating inequality in opportunity is at the heart of an inclusive growth strategy. So inclusive growth can also be defined as “growth coupled with equality of opportunities”.

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II. Inclusive growth and fiscal policy Fiscal policy should aim to (a) address critical constraints to growth (infrastructure, human capital, counter-cyclical); (b) equalize access to opportunity, and (c) support social protection; Fiscal policy should not aim to equalize income through excessive taxation; but taxation is important to mobilize revenues to finance spending.

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III. Fiscal reform for inclusive growth in PRC: Spending Empirical studies show public spending on education and health reduces inequality. But spending on social protection and housing increases inequality in Asia, perhaps because these programs largely benefit the better-off urban population – suggesting the need to extend the coverage to rural areas.

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III. Fiscal reform for inclusive growth in PRC: Spending PRC has a large scope to reduce inequality through social spending – its social spending is low compared with OECD and upper middle income countries. The size of PRC’s non-social spending (20% of GDP in 2008) is comparable to OECD and upper middle income country averages. How to increase social spending: (a) switching spending from non-social to social and/or (b) finding additional revenue sources.

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III. Fiscal reform for inclusive growth in PRC: Revenues Composition  PRC’s consumption/VAT and corporate taxes (as % of GDP) are comparable to the levels of OECD, but the size of personal income tax at 1.3% of GDP (in 2011) is small.

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III. Fiscal reform for inclusive growth in PRC: Revenues VAT  VAT is regressive, but is less distortionary and easier to collect than income taxes, and is a major source of revenues in most countries.  PRC’s VAT rate at 17% is lower than most OECD countries, but not low compared with non-OECD countries.  The issue is to extend VAT coverage to the services sectors - the government is implementing a pilot program to replace the business tax with VAT in certain service sectors, such as the transportation sector – this should be continued.

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III. Fiscal reform for inclusive growth in PRC: Revenues SOE dividend payment  In 2010, SOEs produced 27% of the gross industrial output and owned 42% of total industrial assets.  Many SOEs pay no dividends, and the top rate for even the most profitable ones is 15% of profits. By contrast, SOEs in other countries issue dividends that average 33% of profits.  According the World Bank’s China 2030 study, if SOEs were to pay out half of their profits to the budget—a ratio prevailing in developed countries—budgetary revenues would grow by about 3% of GDP.

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III. Fiscal reform for inclusive growth in PRC: Revenues Taxation of land and property: Move towards a modern property tax: market value-based transfer taxes and annual taxes  Property tax revenue collection on average amounts to about 2% of GDP for OECD and less than 1% for developing countries. Social insurance contribution: The rates of contribution by urban workers are high by international standards:  Pension 20%; unemployment insurance 2%; medical insurance 6%; total 29-31% of the payroll. Inheritance tax.

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IV. Summary Fiscal policy should be a key part of an inclusive growth strategy (by addressing constraints to growth, equalizing opportunity through social spending, and supporting social protection). PRC’s public spending on education, health and social protection is low compared with high and upper middle income country averages and there is a large scope for increasing. There is a large scope for PRC to enhance revenue mobilization and make it more equitable by undertaking further reforms in  VAT,  Personal income tax,  SOE dividend payment,  Property tax,  Inheritance tax,  Individual social insurance contributions, and  intergovernmental fiscal relations.